lol It's a descending line/melody. Apart from having one of the all-time greatest album-sequel titles, “Ugh, Those Feels Again” — which follows this R&B-leaning Swedish-Persian singer’s 2017 debut full-length, “Feels” — succeeds on a far more complex level: making familiar sounds unfamiliar.But the unusually complex production lofts it to a level that is leagues beyond “Feels”: The upper frequencies are often bright and clear, but the bass and low end is woozy and blurry; various sounds and melodies float dreamily in and out of the mix.
Sample appears at
when you listen to Isaac Hayes at 0:36, he 'raps' "I took advantage of you" half way through the loop.... was their an instrumental version of this song that they managed to get their hands on or have they spliced together the loop from two different reference points?I agree with King Rizlaa that Portishead Glory Box has Wallace Collection Daydream baselineYep. Related Songs Other songs sampled in Portishead's Only You: ... Other songs that sampled Ken Thorne's In the Alley Ways: Nothing Burns Like the Cold by Snoh Aalegra feat. Sample appears at Since Daydream was recorded in 68 and Rap II in 71, it's chronologically correct that Ike got it from Wallace Collection, then decades later, Portishead, Tricky and I Monster sample it again. You must be logged in to comment. ?Copyright © 2020 WhoSampled.com Limited. I personally prefer Tricky's use of the same sample from the same year, in "Hell is Round the Corner" - it just has a darker, grittier edge, but both are amazing.Don't think so - it sounds like they just sampled the whole of Isaac Hayes's tune, including the bassline.
References waft in and out as well: a Stevie Wonder moment floats by, then something reminds you of “Badizm”-era Erykah Badu, then there’s a sped-up vocal sample like one from Kanye’s “College Dropout,” then she shifts her voice into a Michael Jackson range.
I'm not even sure why someone would relate this song to Wallace because if Isaac wanted to do there song. There was no 12" of Ike's Rap II though, it was made before the advent of 12" singles.
As for the talking on the Isaac Hayes tune: much of it pans over to one channel, so taking a mono sample from the opposite would get you get you an almost clean loop you could tidy with a tiny bit of filtering.
The only thing that got me on to this was Drapht - Down which heavily samples the Tim Buckley track. The bassline is a common descending line that appears on a ton of songs. This time, it’s “Peace,” which does not resemble Portishead’s “Sour Times” in terms of melody but has a similar twisted-funk vibe and several similar DJ scratches and sound effects.
Copyright © 2020 WhoSampled.com Limited. I can't agree he sampled them. Portishead and Tricky sampled Isaac hayes (Ike's Rap) around the same time. All rights reserved.Sample appears at I'm loving that sound. @Balderdash interesting thought, but I've just listened to the Tim Buckley track and can't hear anything that Portishead sampled from it. But is just my thought. Read Next: The Rolling Stones’ ‘Goats Head Soup’ Deluxe Edition Revisits an Awkward Era, but Adds a Glorious Live Album
Sometimes the influences are worn prominently on their musical sleeves: “You” could be a long-lost early ‘80s Prince ballad (although it would have been called “U”), and for Aalegra’s second album in a row, there’s a song that channels Portishead to a remarkable degree. I'm just trying to figure out HOW are you getting that Isaac Hayes sampled anything?
Most of this album is a cover. So maybe they sampled Tim Buckley's Pleasant Street too? Noe the reason I bring up Drapht - Down is because that song got me onto it all, even this website!They must've chopped it up becuase the violin is a combination of the two different melodies. © Copyright 2020 Variety Media, LLC, a subsidiary of Penske Business Media, LLC. But while the influences here are prominent and obvious, they surface more as winks and homages. Jasmine said 6 years ago: perfection. Be the first to comment on this sample! For those curious about the new XS commercial, the song they’re playing is Nothing Burns Like the Cold by Snoh Aalegra.. You must be logged in to comment. lol I heard this in the commercial and was like "this isn't glory box..."That's why I cited it as the sample and not Glory Box, because it came first.
My guess is everybpody sampled Wallace Collection - DayDream. They're two different songs all together.. Cheers. The 1971 cut from Black Moses has been sampled numerous times, most notably by Portishead for “Glory Box” and most recently by Alessia Cara on “Here.” Tomorrow, Snoh … So no he didn't sample Wallace Collection.
Daydream has itself been covered many times and many of those covers have been sampled, but this entry and others listed on this page are clearly samples of Isaac, not Daydream. All rights reserved.Sample appears at People did that and still do it.
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